there would be reason
for grave concern." —Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy, in Hudson v. Michigan, June
15, 2006.

The
Psychotic Militarization of Law Enforcement

How did it ever come down to abandoning
peace keeping and accepting law enforcement by any means? Even the New York Times expresses alarm in, When the Police Go Military.

"The
Posse Comitatus Act of 1878 generally bars the military from law enforcement activities within the United States. But today,
some local and city police forces have rendered the law rather moot. They have tanks - yes, tanks, often from military surplus,
for use in hostage situations or drug raids - not to mention the sort of equipment and training one would need to deter a
Mumbai-style guerrilla assault."

"The SWAT concept was popularized by Los Angeles Police Chief Darryl Gates in the late
1960s in response to large-scale incidents for which the police were ill-prepared. But the use of SWAT teams has since exploded.
Massive SWAT raids using military-style equipment are becoming routine methods for executing search warrants. One study estimates
40,000 such raids per year nationwide:

"These increasingly
frequent raids… are needlessly subjecting nonviolent drug offenders, bystanders, and wrongly targeted civilians to
the terror of having their homes invaded while they're sleeping, usually by teams of heavily armed paramilitary units dressed
not as police officers but as soldiers."

John W. Whitehead writes in the Huffington Post that "it appears to have less to do with increases in violent
crime and more to do with law enforcement bureaucracy and a police state mentality."

Mr.
Whitehead is correct as usual. Unfortunately, few other constitutional conservatives seem to have the courage to criticize
the thin blue line of establishment regulators.

"American neighborhoods are increasingly
being policed by cops armed with the weapons and tactics of war. Federal funding in the billions of dollars has allowed state
and local police departments to gain access to weapons and tactics created for overseas combat theaters - and yet very little
is known about exactly how many police departments have military weapons and training, how militarized the police have become,
and how extensively federal money is incentivizing this trend. It's time to understand the true scope of the militarization
of policing in America and the impact it is having in our neighborhoods. Since March 6th, ACLU affiliates in 25 states filed
over 260 public records requests with law enforcement agencies and National Guard offices to determine the extent to which
federal funding and support has fueled the militarization of state and local police departments."

One of the "so called" unintended consequences of the Iraq and Afghanistan
wars is the intentional indoctrination of troops into the culture of excessive force, citizen combatant threats and indiscriminate
brutality. The suppression of common law natural rights is the ultimate causality of this deranged and profane mind control.

The study Can a Veteran go into Law Enforcement
after a PTSD Diagnosis?, inquiry provides a useful comparison chart of several police agencies.
The summary concludes that several agencies stated that they had hired individuals with histories of PTSD and most agencies
did not have specific protocols for evaluating PTSD.

If military training becomes instinctive and reactive, treating civilians as expected
terrorists, why would society presume that stateside transition into a police academy course will purge the damaging traits
of urban warfare?

Behind the curtain of "public safety"
the real controllers adopt and practice their perverse version of, The Psychopathic Influence, that dominates the domestic police mentality.

Both the financial elite and their servants
who maintain this system, appear to exhibit behavior that is consistent with symptoms associated with a medical disorder known
as psychopathy.(*) Psychopaths, also called sociopaths, are categorized as those who exhibit superficial charm and intelligence,
and are absent of delusions or nervousness. Their traits include:

- Unreliability

- Frequent lying

- Deceitful and manipulative behavior (either goal-oriented or for the delight
of the act itself)

- Lack of remorse or shame

- Antisocial behavior

-
Poor judgment and failure to learn by experience

- Incapacity
for love

- Poverty of general emotions

- Loss of insight

- Unresponsiveness in personal relations

- A frequent need for excitement

- An inflated self-worth

- An ability to rationalize
their behavior

- A need for complete power

- A need to dominate others

Often candidates with such a Napoleonic complex, demonstrate that they really are "little men", when it
comes to their desire to become goons. The Police Are Paramilitary Thugs, makes a valid point.

"In America, our cops are becoming less
and less distinguishable from the security apparati of 1970s-era petty dictatorships in Central and South America. Where once
they wore uniforms which were appropriate to civil servants, albeit ones with guns, they now don the habiliments of what more
closely resembles a paramilitary organization, and they have the bullying, menacing, we’re-above-the-law attitudes to
go along with them. These attitudes are demonstrated in this video, which unambiguously shows one such paramilitary — what point is there
in referring to them any longer as "cops" since that term suggests a civil role? – Seizing a video recording
device from an innocuous bystander. The transparently absurd justification for the seizure was that the device contained evidence
that the person being arrested was "resisting", and therefore, they were entitled to take it."

How
did 9/11 alter the domestic relationship between the military and police?

"It really just accelerated a process that had already been in motion for 20 years. The main effect of 9/11
on domestic policing is the DHS grant program, which writes huge checks to local police departments across the country to
purchase machine guns, helicopters, tanks, and armored personnel carriers. The Pentagon had already been giving away the same
weapons and equipment for about a decade, but the DHS grants make that program look tiny.

But probably of more concern is the ancillary effect of those grants. DHS grants are lucrative enough that many defense
contractors are now turning their attention to police agencies -- and some companies have sprung up solely to sell military-grade
weaponry to police agencies who get those grants. That means we're now building a new industry whose sole function is to militarize
domestic police departments. Which means it won't be long before we see pro-militarization lobbying and pressure groups with
lots of (taxpayer) money to spend to fight reform. That's a corner it will be difficult to un-turn. We're probably there already.
Say hello to the police-industrial complex."

"To Protect and Serve" is now an euphemism for
breaking heads. Police Thugs Claim They’re
Here to "Serve" wants you to believe that "police are basically the same all over the
world: they describe their role of carrying out the force and coercion required by those wanting to control others as being
a role of "serving the people." Those who are at the receiving end of the force and coercion are usually submissive
and question nothing." Tell that to Adam Kokesh.

The "Code of Silence" enables The Militarization of American Police, to blow smoke on a gullible public. Accountability and recourse is
a myth. The SWAT system whacks the public as if they were nuisance flies.

"Police supporters claim the public already has plenty of oversight. But observers always find the same pattern: The internal investigations are not
public, and the deputies stay on the force with no obvious punishment. The DA exonerates the deputies. The grand jury only
gets involved in the most highly publicized cases, and such juries are controlled by the DA and represent a narrow, conservative
demographic. (Around here, it's mostly retired government workers who can afford to spend half their day working at the court
for virtually no pay.) When a member of the public files a complaint with a police or sheriff's department, it typically takes
months to hear anything back. Then the only legal requirement is for the agency to say whether the complaint was "sustained"
or "not sustained." Such complaints are rarely sustained."

The psychotic statists that have no problem with the militarization of law enforcement are enemies of the people.
How far has this country fallen . . . Listen to the fateful words of the nature of the police by the original Godfather
of the Chicago Gestapo. The demented and mentally deranged oligarchy, who is at war with the American public, is the true
terrorist. Police need to examine, recite and act upon the Oath Keepers - Declaration Of Orders We Will Not
Obey.